Microsoft weighs TikTok purchase as ad business flattens
out
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[August 01, 2020] By
Paresh Dave
OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters) - Microsoft Corp
<MSFT.O> could re-energize its advertising business with a huge supply
of video if it follows through on acquiring TikTok's U.S. operations
from ByteDance.
Reuters reported on Friday, citing a source familiar with the matter,
that Microsoft is in exploratory deal talks as the U.S. government
prepares to force China-based ByteDance to divest its video app TikTok
over data security concerns.
Microsoft generates the bulk of its $143 billion in annual revenue by
licensing software such as Windows and Office as well as cloud storage
and computing tools through its Azure service.
The company, with advertising supported businesses including its Bing
search engine, MSN news service and LinkedIn business social network,
disclosed this month that its search ads sales grew 1% to $7.7 billion
over the last year. But that growth was flat when excluding fees it pays
to partner websites and apps.
The ad market research company eMarketer has estimated LinkedIn's ad
revenue at about $2 billion annually in the United States alone. But
Microsoft also said this month LinkedIn ads sales have fallen this year
as the novel coronavirus pandemic prompted advertisers to pare spending.
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A Microsoft logo is seen a day after Microsoft Corp's $26.2 billion
purchase of LinkedIn Corp, in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 14,
2016. REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
Social media services, including Facebook Inc <FB.O> and Alphabet Inc's <GOOGL.O>
YouTube, have seen their sales growth continue during the pandemic as users
spend more time entertaining themselves online - particularly with video - and
advertisers follow them there.
Without an entertainment service aimed at a broad audience, Microsoft has
struggled to capture the increasingly lucrative videos flowing to YouTube,
Facebook and more recently TikTok, which widely opened its ad tools this month.
Increased U.S. regulatory scrutiny of potentially anticompetitive behavior by
Facebook and YouTube have likely diminished their ability to purchase a major
competitor soon, according to antitrust experts. Microsoft, though, faces fewer
constraints.
"Its consumer strategy remains in flux and an aggressive acquisition (or
strategic investment) of TikTok would be Microsoft throwing its hat in the ring
and trying to compete with other tech giants in a new avenue of growth," Wedbush
financial analyst Dan Ives said in a statement on Friday.
(Reporting by Paresh Dave; Editing by Tom Brown)
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